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The New Jersey Smoke-Free Air Act was introduced to the New Jersey Senate on October 14, 2004, by Senator John H. Adler and Senator Thomas H. Kean, Jr. [1] The bill was passed by the New Jersey Senate on December 15, 2005, with a vote of 29 to 7 and by the New Jersey Assembly on January 9, 2006, with a vote of 64 to 12. [1]
New Jersey: 1991 N.J. STAT. ANN. §§ 34:6B-1 et seq. New Mexico: 1991 N.M. STAT. ANN. §§ 50-11-1 et seq. New York: 1992 [LABOR] LAW § 201-d Not specific to tobacco use, covers all lawful activities North Carolina: 1991 N.C. GEN. STAT. § 95-28.2 Not specific to tobacco use, covers all lawful activities North Dakota: 1993
In California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, New Jersey, North Dakota, Oregon, Utah, and Vermont, usage of e-cigarettes is prohibited indoors. The strictest smoking ban in the United States is in Calabasas, California , where smoking anywhere a non-smoker could congregate, including public sidewalks and apartment complexes, is a ...
New Jersey residents should be prepared for smoke conditions to last for several days, the New Jersey Forest Fire Service warned on Friday. PHOTO: Edgewater Fire Company #1 shows a forest fire ...
The first sign of trouble blew into New Jersey last year as a benign spectacle. Smoke from raging wildfires in Canada lingered high in the atmosphere over the Garden State for a few days in late ...
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These laws first appeared in the late nineteenth century, with New Jersey becoming the first state to set a minimum purchase age of sixteen in 1883. [3] By 1920, around half of states had their minimum purchase age of twenty-one and some simply prohibited " minors " (ages 14–24) from purchasing. [ 3 ]
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